

“Mom, we can’t be here all night,” says freshman Karen Feng in response to her mother’s suggestion that she speak in chinese tonight. Despite her mother Camille Chen offering to help translate, Feng remains reluctant.“Here, there is an obvious generation gap between us,” Chen says, speaking in a blend of Chinese and English. “I want her to use Chinese so her grandma can understand.”This is the sixth year that Feng, her parents, and her maternal grandmother Mei Hua Yang and grandfather Yae Quan Chen—three generations—have been living together. A 2010 report based on U.S. Census Bureau data by the Pew Research Center found that 16 percent of the U.S. population currently lives in a multi-generational household. Although three generations living under one roof comes with its problems, there seems to be a general consensus in Feng’s family that overcoming the conflicts that arise from opposing viewpoints has helped build a stronger bond within the family.
